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Sherman Nursery Company, Charles City, Iowa 
American Beauty Roses 
ROSES, continued 
The Bride. Most beautiful of the white 
Tea Roses, and forced in numberless 
quantities every year. The great, solid 
flowers remain perfect long after cutting; 
the stems are long and stiff, the foliage 
large and glossy; tender. 
Bridesmaid. Clear bright pink, of an 
exquisite shade. Grown chiefly for its 
large, solid and handsome buds; the 
stems are good; the foliage glossy. Ex- 
cellent also for bedding. Not hardy in 
this latitude. 
Crimson Rambler. The famous crimson- 
clustered climber, so extremely effective 
when grown on pillars and trellises. The 
plant is a vigorous grower, making shoots 
8 to lo feet long in a season. The foli- 
age is large and glossy; the plant looks 
like a mass of double crimson flowers 
when in bloom. The panicles are large 
and remain perfect for several weeks. 
Hardy anywhere. 
Coquette des Alpes. A free-blooming 
Rose of medium size; white, tinged with 
Exceedingly dainty and at- 
pale rose, 
tractive. 
Clothilde Soupert. A grand free-flower- 
ing Rose; fine for bedding out or pot 
culture. The flowers are very double 
and handsomely formed, borne in sprays 
Outer petals pearl-white, shading to a 
center of rosy pink. 
Crested Moss. Deep pink-colored buds, 
surrounded with a mossy fringe and crest; 
free from mildew. \ fragrant, very beau- 
tiful Rose. 
Dorothy Perkins. Of the same strong 
habit of growth as the Crimson Rambler. 
Large for a Rose of this class, very double, 
of a beautiful shell-pink color; sweetly 
scented, and borne in clusters of thirty 
or forty. One of the best. 
Duke of Edinburgh. A seedling of Gen- 
eral Jacqueminot; large, double flowers 
with little fragrance, bright crimson in 
color; foliage large and attractive. Blos- 
soms very early in the season. A hand- 
some Rose. 
